Ningbo Port plans to tighten its partnership with rival Shanghai after Ningbo Port's initial public offering on the Shanghai Stock Exchange on September 14, reported the South China Morning Post.
The two neighbouring ports in the Yangtze River Delta are the world's two largest ports by cargo tonnage.
Ningbo Port has received approval from the China Securities Regulatory Commission to issue 2.5 billion A shares on the Shanghai exchange, from which the state-owned port operator hopes to raise at least US$1.92 billion.
Ningbo Port's strategy was to capitalise on the central government's policy to establish Shanghai as a leading international port by expanding its scale as a deepwater port and increasing its specialisation, said Ningbo Port's IPO prospectus.
"I see the two ports growing stronger rather than weaker going forward. In the past, there was a lot more rivalry between Shanghai and Ningbo, but at the end of the day, they don't need to compete fiercely because both are enjoying strong volume growth," said Anderson Chow, Asia head of infrastructure research at Macquarie Securities.
Sunny Ho Lap-kee, executive director of the Hong Kong Shippers' Council, said that if Shanghai and Ningbo developed aggressively, they might take some of Hong Kong's international transhipment business. In 2009, Shanghai was the port with the world's most cargo throughput at 590 million tonnes, with Ningbo second at 570 million tonnes and Singapore third, according to data by the Port of Rotterdam.
Excluding river cargo, Ningbo had the world's most cargo throughput at 577 million tonnes in 2009, with Shanghai second at 495 million tonnes, according to data by China's Ministry of Transport. Last year, Ningbo ranked eighth globally in container throughput with 10.26 million TEUS.
During the first half, Ningbo's container throughput grew 34.4 per cent to 6.27 million TEUs, overtaking Guangzhou as China's third-busiest container port behind Shanghai and Shenzhen. On a monthly basis, Shanghai is the world's busiest container port, with Singapore second, Shenzhen third and Hong Kong fourth.
"Ningbo is stronger than Shanghai in bulk cargo. Because of its location, Shanghai still enjoys an advantage in containers," Chow said.
(Source:www.cargonewsasia.com)